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ABSTRACT: Importance
Lm is a ubiquitous food-borne pathogen that can cause severe disease to vulnerable populations. During infection, Lm relies on a wide repertoire of secreted virulence factors including the LLO that enables the bacterium to invade the host and spread from cell to cell. After membrane translocation, secreted factors must become active in the challenging bacterial cell membrane-wall interface. However, the mechanisms required for secreted protein folding and function are largely unknown. Lm encodes a chaperone, PrsA2, that is critical for the activity of secreted factors. Here, we show that PrsA2 directly associates and protects the major Lm virulence factor, LLO, under conditions corresponding to the host cytosol, where LLO undergoes irreversible denaturation. Additionally, we identify molecular features of PrsA2 that enable its interaction with LLO. Together, our results suggest that Lm and perhaps other Gram-positive bacteria utilize secreted chaperones to regulate the activity of pore-forming toxins during infection.
SUBMITTER: Agbavor C
PROVIDER: S-EPMC11253611 | biostudies-literature | 2024 Jul
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
mBio 20240529 7
Pathogenic bacteria rely on secreted virulence factors to cause disease in susceptible hosts. However, in Gram-positive bacteria, the mechanisms underlying secreted protein activation and regulation post-membrane translocation remain largely unknown. Using proteomics, we identified several proteins that are dependent on the secreted chaperone PrsA2. We followed with phenotypic, biochemical, and biophysical assays and computational analyses to examine the regulation of a detected key secreted vir ...[more]